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by vo2maxer
2396 days ago
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Over treatment with antibiotics is rampant not only with genitourinary syndromes but even more with respiratory diseases. I am not sure how a female patient, afebrile, without any other morbidity, presenting with classic symptoms of dysuria, urgency, frequency, and hematuria, but having a normal urinalysis, would dissuade me from prescribing antibiotics empirically. As much as most physicians would do a urinalysis routinely, just because it’s done like many other unnecessary tests, it adds little to the management. And let’s not even go into the challenges of obtaining a clean catch. What I would do if not sure of the organism or the patient had been previously treated, is to order a urinalysis with a reflex urine culture. Nonetheless, after my argument against the use of urinalysis in managing an uncomplicated UTI, I still think you may have a winner given that testing is still widely done. If you have robust medical provider support who understands the limitations, then a significant number of patients would benefit without incurring the large cost or time spent seeking help. |
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